ymptomes.
|
7. Of the melancholicke excrement. | Of the matter of melancholy.
|
8. What burnt choller is, and |
the causes thereof. |
|
9. How melancholie worketh | Symptomes or signes in the
fearful passions in the mind. | mind.
|
10. How the body affecteth the | Of the soul and her faculties.
soule. |
|
11. Objections againste the manner |
how the body affecteth the |
soule, with answere thereunto. |
|
12. A farther answere to the |
former objections, and of the simple |
facultie of the soule, and onely |
organicall of spirit and body. |
|
13. How the soule, by one simple |
facultie, performeth so many and |
diverse actions. |
|
{192}
14. The particular answeres to |
the objections made in the 11th |
chapter. |
|
15. Whether perturbations rise | Division of perturbations.
of humour or not, with a division |
of the perturbations. |
|
16. Whether perturbations which |
are not moved by outward occasions |
rise of humour or not: and |
how? |
|
17. How melancholie procureth | Sorrow, fear, envy, hatred, malice,
feare, sadnes, despaire, and such | anger, &c. causes.
passions. |
|
18. Of the unnaturall melancholie | Symptomes of head-melancholy.
rising by adjustion: how |
it affecteth us with diverse passions.|
|
19. How sickness and yeares | Continent, inward, antecedent,
seeme to alter the mind, and the | next causes, and how the body
cause: and how the soule hath | works on the mind.
practise of senses separated from |
the body. |
|
20. The accidentes which befall | An heap of other accident
|